Hello again!
Mitch,thank you for your reply!The plastic bag was the bag of the Silica gel.I got it from my new pair of shoes.This bag is semi-permeable,so water mollecules can pass through it.If the size of the CoCl2 molecules is bigger than water molecules,then yes,everything is safe.But if not,I worry that these molecules have attacked my specimens.
Conducting an experiment with my poor knowledge on Chemistry and my poor equipment wouldn't help.But,please,suppose an experiment.
The specimens form a collection.I do not use them for something.It's a common hobby,like collecting coins.The better you store some specimens the more you have them.There are minerals very fragile and sensitive to acids(like Gypsum-it dissolves even in distilled water!!!),while others cannot be dissolved even in very strong acids (like Beryl- Emerald is the green variety of Beryl).
I want my specimens to be intact in any matter(even on molecular level-not only visually),and to achive that I have to control the conditions-humidity,acidity,light,temperature.
An enviroment full of acid fumes can attack many of the different minerals.Humidity cause many of them to oxidate.Light causes in many cases loss of color(Amethyst loses color very easily because of sunlight).Low temperature makes some mineral crystals brake!You see,depending on the type of the specimen,one can be very fragile or less.
Now,on the problem:so you think that vapours couldn't reach the specimen?
Btw,to give you some info,Silica Gel beads have a blue center( a smaller sphere inside the Silica bead).This is the Cobalt Chloride coloration.The bead turns colorless and transparent when I add a drop of water.Then,when I heat it it turns blue again.
Thank you VERY much!
-Kostas.